One item filed by prosecutors was in response to a defense request asking the judge to order the state to provide certain forensic information, including details about labs that performed tests on evidence.

Meanwhile, defense attorney Jose Baez filed an amended deposition notice. Among the people scheduled to be questioned under oath by the defense team: a neighbor of the Anthony family and an Orange County Sheriff’s Office employee.

The documents include several photos of Anthony and Caylee, including one showing the toddler wearing a shirt with the phrase “Big Trouble Comes In Small Packages.” Fragments of child’s T-shirt with the same slogan was found with Caylee’s remains in December 2008.

Also amid the documents is a television script discussing a jail phone call from Anthony to her brother, Lee, regarding Zenaida Gonzalez, who is the nanny Anthony maintains kidnapped Caylee.

Another document is wage information for the time that Anthony worked at Event Imaging Solutions, a photography vendor with Universal Studios. A finger print report on a bag of evidence from Anthony’s car was also included in that file. It showed no finger prints were found.

The state will release about 30 pages today, adding to the more than 10,000 pages that have already been made public, a spokeswoman for the State Attorney’s Office said. The evidence is being made public in response to a public records request made by the Orlando Sentinel.

Pretty big news in the case today as documents released today show that FBI lab technicians found traces of chloroform inside a bottle and a syringe found near the Florida site where Caylee Anthony’s remains were found.

Reports released last year show that someone at the Anthony’s home used the family computer to search the Web for directions on how to make chloroform and neck breaking

The report from the FBI’s lab shows the Cool Blue-flavored Gatorade drink contained an “unknown liquid.” The bottle also contained a plastic bag labeled “Disposable Syringe Kit” with a plastic syringe inside of the bag.

A report generated in June and labeled “Summary of results” by Dr. Michael Rickenbach of the FBI indicates chemical tests show the syringe contained chloroform, testosterone, ethanol and water.

Chloroform has been depicted in movies and on television when a person uses a rag soaked in the liquid to cover the mouth and nose of another, making the victim lose consciousness. A person can die if too much of the chemical is inhaled. Chloroform also is the byproduct of contact between chorine used in swimming pools and skin, sweat or urine. Commercially, it is used in refrigeration.

Many of us already knew this but it seems that Casey Anthony asked for sedatives after she found out a toddler’s remains had been found in woods near her family’s home. This is according to interviews with jail staff that were released earlier this morning.

It’s also expected that her attorney will release a statement later today.

A medical supervisor at the jail where Casey Anthony is being held told investigators that Anthony asked for the medication after learning of the Dec. 11 discovery of the remains. DNA tests completed days later showed the remains belonged to her daughter, Caylee Anthony, who’d been missing for six months.

Tammy Uncer told detectives she was surprised by the request because Anthony hadn’t asked for any such medication before.

“It was very, very odd,” Uncer said in one of the interviews that’s among hours of tapes released by prosecutors Monday.

Weeks earlier, Anthony calmly asserted to investigators that she believed her daughter was still alive during an interview the day she was indicted on a first-degree murder charge.

“You know certain things about your child. You can feel that connection,” Anthony tells investigators during the Oct. 14 interview. “I know that she’s alive whether you have a bucketload of evidence downstairs that contradicts that and says otherwise or all you have is speculation.”

FBI Agent Nick Savage responds: “We have a lot or else we wouldn’t have made it to this point. A lot.”